How to Conjugate Irregular –ir French Verbs

Many verbs have an -ir ending, but not all of them play nice! Some verbs don’t follow the regular patterns. They are irregular, and many of them actually don’t follow much of a pattern at all!

How to conjugate short French -ir verbs

About 30 -ir verbs don’t follow the regular -ir conjugation pattern of finir. These are short verbs because they lack the -iss part of the plural endings that regular -ir verbs have. To conjugate such -ir verbs, the easiest way is to separate the singular forms (je, tu, il/elle/on) from the plural (nous, vous, ils/elles).

Here’s how to conjugate the present tense of short -irverbs for the je, tu, and il/elle/on forms:

Drop the -ir ending as well as the final consonant before it.

For example, for the verb partir (to leave), you take off -tir, so you’re left with par-.

Now add the ending that fits your subject: -s, -s, or -t.

In the example, you wind up with this: je pars, tu pars, il/elle/on part.

Here’s how to conjugate the present tense of short -ir verbs for the nous, vous, and ils/elles forms:

Drop only the -ir of the infinitive to get the stem.

For example, for the verb partir, you take off -ir, so you’re left with part-.

Now add the ending -ons, -ez, or -ent.

You wind up with this: nous partons, vous partez, ils/elles partent.

The following tables give you an example of the short -ir conjugation, next to a regular -ir verb conjugation so you can clearly see the missing -iss in the plural . The short -ir verb is partir, and the long one grandir.

French -ir verbs that behave like -er verbs

Some -ir verbs behave like -er verbs. To conjugate them, you drop the -ir ending, like you would with a regular verb like finir. Then you add, well, the regular -er verb endings: -e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, and -ent! Here’s the complete conjugation of one such verb, ouvrir (to open).

j’ouvre

nous ouvrons

tu ouvres

vous ouvrez

il/elle/on ouvre

ils/elles ouvrent

Other verbs of this type include découvrir (to discover), offrir (to offer), and souffrir (to suffer).

The French verbs venir and tenir

Finally, you meet a special group of verbs: venir (to come), tenir (to hold), and all their siblings (called compound verbs because they are formed with a prefix + venir or tenir). Such verbs include: se souvenir (to remember), devenir (to become), revenir (to come back), appartenir (to belong), and soutenir (to support).

To conjugate these irregular -ir verbs, drop the -enir of the infinitive and replace it with -iens, -iens, -ient, -enons, -enez, or -iennent. The following tables give you the complete present tense conjugation of venir and tenir.

je viens

nous venons

tu viens

vous venez

il/elle/on vient

ils/elles viennent

je tiens

nous tenons

tu tiens

vous tenez

Il/elle/on tient

ils/elles tiennent

The je, tu, il/elle/on, and ils/elles forms have the same stem (-ien + ending), whereas the nousandvousforms have the same stem as the infinitive (-en).